Does no-one have the guts to tackle China on the Uighurs?

On 24 November 2019, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) – along with 17 media partners from 14 countries around the world – published the "China Cables". In interview with World Uighur Congress president, Dolkun Isa, leading ICIJ journalist Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian and whistleblower Asiye Abdulaheb, Sven Lilienstroem, founder of Faces of Democracy, asks what, if anything, has changed for the Uighurs since?

By Sven Lilienström

It is estimated that there are up to 20 million Uighurs worldwide – approximately half of them live in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, located in the northwest of China. What can you tell us about the daily lives of people there?

Dolkun Isa: The daily lives of the Uighur people still in East Turkestan – also known as the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region – have changed dramatically in the last 20 years. Every aspect of Uighur lives have been affected by the Chinese government’s crimes against humanity. Almost every family has had someone disappear or be arbitrarily detained in the internment camps or other detention facilities. Over the past two decades the entire region has been turned into what is essentially an "open-air prison" and was called a "no rights zone" by members of the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD).

Uighurs live in constant fear of being taken to the camps or otherwise punished. Uighurs are not able to practice their religion, engage in Uighur cultural activities or even use their native language in schools and public spaces. The very existence of the Uighur people is under threat and the Uighur people inside and outside of East Turkestan are suffering incredibly due to the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) repressive policies.

President of the World Uighur Congress Dolkun Isa was born in Uighur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang, located in China's northwest. Wanted by Interpol for 21 years as a result of a "red notice" issued by China, Isa fled to Germany from the People's Republic in 1996 (photo: Dolkun Isa)
"The international community must stop believing the blatant lies of the Chinese government. It must take concrete action – including targeted sanctions and banning companies from using Uighur forced labour or from working with Chinese companies complicit in the repression of Uighurs. 'Business as usual' cannot be conducted with China while it is committing crimes against humanity and detaining millions of innocent people against their will"

At the end of 2019 the China Cables came as a shock to the international community. What has changed since then? How should Germany, the European Union and the international community now react?

Isa: Despite the fact that the China Cables, the Qaraqash List and other recently leaked documents have proved, beyond doubt, that crimes against humanity are being perpetrated against Uighurs in East Turkestan, not enough has changed. The European Union, Germany and the USA have been taking some action to address this issue and have raised the leaked documents at the United Nations and in bilateral discussions with China; but more substantial action is still needed. The camps remain open and the Chinese government is now coercing thousands of Uighurs into forced labour in facilities around the country. The European Union and Western states that have raised this crisis need to build a broader coalition including Muslim-majority, African, South American and Asian states, but China’s influence and investments have kept these states silent.

In response to the leaked documents, the Chinese government chose not to address the findings, but instead claimed the documents were false. The international community must stop believing the blatant lies of the Chinese government. It must take concrete action – including targeted sanctions and banning companies from using Uighur forced labour or from working with Chinese companies complicit in the repression of Uighurs. 'Business as usual' cannot be conducted with China while it is committing crimes against humanity and detaining millions of innocent people against their will.

You were on the run for 21 years. The "red notice" issued against you was only rescinded in 2018. How does it feel to live under a state of emergency for two decades? Is Germany now a safe haven for you?

Isa: The "red notice" – that the Chinese government wrongly issued against me – was found to be politically motivated and without evidence. It made my life difficult and insecure. There were several close calls, such as when I was detained in South Korea and was at risk of being deported to China, due to the red notice. It also prevented me from engaging in a lot of my human rights work, as I had visas cancelled at the last moment and was also briefly detained in Italy while entering the Senate, due to the red notice. It was thanks to the German government that I was not deported from China and I, along with the Uighur community in Germany, am very grateful to the German government for giving us a safe haven! If it were not for Germany I could have been forcibly returned to China and killed or "disappeared".

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While we are deeply grateful for the German government’s efforts to protect Uighur residents and citizens, life in Germany and around the world has become increasingly insecure recently. Chinese influence around the world is growing and, even in Germany, the Uighur diaspora is being monitored and harassed by the Chinese government. At our demonstrations they take photos of the protestors and send them back to China. If we speak out in Germany our relatives are detained or punished. I have already lost both of my parents under mysterious circumstances over the past two years and my brothers are still missing.

Recently, Chinese propaganda has been attacking the World Uighur Congress and me directly, while describing the exterior of our headquarters in Munich in an apparent attempt to intimidate us. I was even physically assaulted at a funeral service in Munich in January 2020 by relatives of the CCP official who live in Germany. They demanded that I stop denouncing their relative and made veiled threats towards my family still in China, before trying to physically assault me. In conclusion, while we are deeply thankful to the German government, China’s long arm and constant harassment is causing Uighurs not feel to safe anywhere in the world!***

According to the ICIJ the "China Cables", published in 2019, prove the existence of forced internment camps for Uighurs in China. When did you find out about these camps for the first time? How did the whole China Cables issue come to light?

Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian: The world first began to hear of the camps in late 2017 when the radio station Radio Free Asia (RFA) published the first article using the word "camps" to describe a situation they had discovered in Xinjiang. At the time, no one had any idea of the scope of scale of the internment. Radio Free Asia had heard that perhaps up to tens of thousands were being detained.

the leading ICIJ journalist for the China Cables project, Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian (photo: Axios)
From the horse's mouth: the China Cables released by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists in November 2019 were the first documents to provide official confirmation of the heinous crimes being committed by the Chinese government in Xinjiang. "We have – in the Chinese Communist Party's own words – instructions for how to operate 'highly securitised facilities' made for mass internment and the re-education of an ethnic group," says ICIJ lead reporter Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian

What really made a difference to the outside world’s understanding of what was happening was when Shawn Zhang and Adrian Zenz, both independent researchers, began looking at satellite images across Xinjiang to identify likely internment camps. This was in early-mid 2018. Zenz then put forward a shocking estimate – the camps could contain up to a million people. He later revised the number upwards to 1.5 million. The documents obtained by the ICIJ were disseminated in Xinjiang in 2017 as the internment camps were being put into operation.

Initially there were only rumours and eyewitness reports – one of the most horrific human rights violations of our times, according to the ICIJ, was only proven with the publication of the China Cables. Why did it take so long for the world find out about the camps?

Allen-Ebrahimian: I’m not sure it’s fair to say that the China Cables were what proved the existence of the camps. There was already extensive evidence. In addition to the RFA publication and the evaluations by Shawn Zhang and Adrian Zenz, several western news outlets had been able to send reporters to Xinjiang to report on the "disappearances" of entire neighbourhoods and to collect stories from people.

And crucially, some very brave people who had been in the camps – and were then released and fled abroad – began telling their stories. This was already all happening by the time the ICIJ published the China Cables. The contribution of the China Cables was that it was the first time the world saw any documents from the "perpetrators" themselves. We have – in the Chinese Communist Party’s own words – instructions for how to operate "highly securitised facilities" made for mass internment and the re-education of an ethnic group.

In February 2020 – two months after publication of the China Cables – China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi described them as "one hundred percent pure lies". So, who is actually telling the truth here?

Allen-Ebrahimian: These are the Chinese Communist Party's own documents. We carefully authenticated them and they are now available online for anyone to read. I will let those documents speak for themselves. By the way: no government will admit to the world that they are currently perpetrating cultural genocide!

***

The New York Times dropped a bombshell when it published the China Cables on 16 November. You were the person who leaked the documents to the ICIJ. How did you obtain the information?

Former journalist Asiye Abdulaheb was born in Urumqi, the capital city of Xinjiang. She fled to the Netherlands in 2009 and remains in hiding from the Chinese government (photo: Asiye Abdulaheb)(photo: Asiye Abdulaheb)
Bitterly disappointed: "During my childhood I repeatedly witnessed the extent to which the Uighurs were marginalised by society. In my opinion the Chinese government has committed crimes against humanity. An entire folk is being interned in a 'concentration camp' in the 21st century. The world simply looks on – no one takes any action," says China Cables whistleblower Asiye Abdulaheb

Asiye Abdulaheb: The information comes from a Uighur pair from the Netherlands. The pair handed me 24 confidential documents which the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists later published. In addition to this came the "Qaraqash List", which was published in the same year.

Just four weeks following publication by the New York Times you revealed yourself as the whistleblower and, therefore, the source of the China Cables. Why did you choose this point in time?

Abdulaheb: Our co-operation with the ICIJ gave rise to numerous sensational events. In September 2019 my ex-husband was contacted by the "Ministry for State Security of the People's Republic of China" and persuaded to travel to Dubai by friends from Urumqi. Upon arrival in Dubai, personnel from the ministry thrust a USB stick into his hand and demanded that he cooperate with them. He was instructed to "simply plug the USB stick into the laptop" – which is what my ex-husband then did. The USB stick contained a huge amount of information about me and other Uighurs who all live in the Netherlands.

To put it plainly, the Chinese Ministry for State Security offered my ex-husband an opportunity to work for them as a spy. My ex-husband told me everything upon his return from Dubai. We decided to go to the police and also make contact with the Dutch authorities on the same day. The condition for this was that my identity should remain secret.

But at this time the Chinese government had already found out that the confidential documents were in my possession – and were determined to prevent their disclosure! Knowing this, I no longer considered myself compelled to hide my identity.

You were born and raised in Urumqi. How did marginalisation and discrimination affect you personally and what needs to happen to ensure the world doesn’t forget once more about the plight of the Uighurs in China?

Abdulaheb: I was born and raised in the City of Urumqi. During my childhood I repeatedly witnessed the extent to which the Uighurs were marginalised by society. In my opinion the Chinese government has committed crimes against humanity. However, these crimes were covered up by the government. An entire folk is being interned in a "concentration camp" in the 21st Century. The world simply looks on – but no one takes any action. I am bitterly disappointed by this!

The imprisoned Uighurs are neither able to save their own lives, nor can they seek prosecution for the crimes committed. The "Wuhan-Virus" was kept secret from the world – and the same is also happening with millions of suppressed Uighurs. This is pure poison. I really hope, therefore, that the world will learn its lesson from the lies of the Chinese government. As societies we can no longer be silent about the crimes committed by a state. Because after 1945 an international institution for human rights was launched – we are all aware of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

We are currently in a crisis situation – and this crisis affects our common values too. I sincerely hope that the world finally takes note and will take action to support the Uighur people. Thank you!

Interviews conducted by Sven Lilienstroem

© Faces of Democracy 2020

Since the establishment of the Faces of Democracy initiative in 2017, more than 600,000 people have – true to the motto "Sign for Democracy" – signed the voluntary commitment to protect and strengthen the fundamental values of a democratic civil society, including more than 80 prominent figures from the world of politics, business and celebrity.

[Editorial note: Objective reporting is the fundamental requirement for a democratic society. With this in mind we asked the Embassy of the People's Republic of China in the Federal Republic of Germany to comment on its position regarding the accusations. They commented as follows: If you have any questions, we would be happy to provide you with some facts about Xinjiang here.]